Page 111 - Wonders of Allah's Creation
P. 111

You see, evolutionists can
                  never explain this. As we
                  explained earlier, the fly is one
                  of the best flying creatures on
                  earth. It can flap its wings 500
                  to 1000 times per second. As

                  you know, it can manoeuvre with extreme ease. No
                  matter how many stories evolutionists tell, they
                  still cannot explain how a bird’s wings came
                  about. They don’t even want to think about the
                  wings of a fly!
                       The truth is that Allah created birds and flies
                  with their wings and the ability to fly.



                    THE ARCHAEOPTERYX, WHICH EVOLUTIONISTS
                      CALL A TRANSITIONAL FORM, IS IN FACT A

                                           COMPLETE BIRD!


                       Let us just present you a few of the differences
                  between reptiles and birds.
                       1. Birds have wings, but reptiles don't.
                       2. Birds have feathers, but reptiles have scales.

                       3. Birds have a unique skeletal system and their
                  bones are hollow. This makes them lighter and
                  makes it easier for them to fly.
                       These are just a few differences that
                  immediately come to mind. There are many more
                  differences between these creatures.
                       If a species of reptile had turned into birds,

                  there ought to have been many creatures that had
                  lived in between the reptiles and the birds
                  representing the phases of this change.
                       Fossil hunters should have been able to come





                                                                                                   109
   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116